Mastaaaaah Foce!
Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 12:41 pm
As I posted in the June Hauls thread, I received Shout Factory's Masterforce DVD in the mail as a gift, probably from my mother, and started watching it the other night. And I decided I'd do episode-by-episode thoughts!
Masterforce is, by far, the most interesting of the "Takara Trilogy" to me. It cleans the slate from Headmasters' ending and from the previous four years of TF cartoon continuity. While Headmasters dealt with all of the hanging threads from the US Season 3 and had the task of introducing all the Headmasters and Targetmasters, Masterforce's clean break makes it really easy for a newcomer to get into the series.
And that clean break is Masterforce's greatest strength and, so far, also its biggest falling. Part of the reason the break works is because Masterforce introduces some very fundamentally different ideas about Transformers--the main characters at the beginning are all Pretenders, and later, human Headmasters. One problem with introducing these kind of characters is that they can sometimes seem overpowered or too far removed from existing characters that they feel out of place, or it's difficult to use them efficiently. By cutting out previous characters, everything begins on a level playing field. The Pretenders don't seem out of place because, at the start of the series, 'all' of the Autobots are Pretenders, and they can all do this.
Unfortunately, it's also a huge drawback to the series, because while longtime fans like myself are ready to go with a new and different interpretation of TF (and have actually been reading about this series for years beforehand!), some casual fans might be turned off because there's no Optimus Prime, no Bumblebee, no Megatron, no Starscream. There's no built-in nostalgia fuel, there's no quick attachment. It's easy to get into Headmasters because the beginning has Optimus Prime and Galvatron and Hot Rod, characters who are familiar to people who've at least seen the American cartoon, or the animated movie. Starting over essentially from scratch means a lot is riding on these initial episodes to make a lasting impression that'll rope in new viewers. (The subtitles don't help, mind you, but hey.) Thankfully for Masterforce, I've been onboard for this series since I first discovered the Optimus Prime toy I had was actually a character named Ginrai in Japan in 2002.
Some more quick brief thoughts: The opening and ending, at least for the early episodes (I don't know if they change them as the show goes on) are just atrocious. Visually, they're not bad, but the songs are just...not good at all. I know that their fare is standard for anime of the 80s, but there are way better 80s anime themes. Why couldn't we have gotten something as good as the Saint Seiya theme, for example? I've resorted to skipping through the intro and ending of each episode.
You also might have heard there was some mild "Americanisation" of the names, and it's true, to a degree. But thankfully, it's not damaging in any way and seems to have been done in the interest of appeasing those who had the toys. Japanese exclusive characters like Ginrai and Metalhawk retain their names--there's no attempt to make Ginrai into "Powermaster Optimus Prime and Hi-Q," for example. On the other hand, more minor characters like Diver and Phoenix have had their names changed to their American versions (in this case, Waverider and Cloudburst). The Autobot Headmaster Juniours retain their Japanese names, probably because they're actually humans, but the Decepticon counterparts don't share the same luxury, so we get humans referred to as Fangry and Squeezeplay. (I'm only a few episodes into this, so I'm not sure if they have separate human names in the subs.) Hydra and Buster retain their Japanese names, probably because those two toys actually differ from their US releases as Dreadwind and Darkwing. I haven't gotten to Overlord's bits yet, but I'm guessing he's called Overlord there, as it should be. Honestly, this doesn't really bother me as much as you'd think it would. The major characters are all called by their proper names, and guys like Landmine and Waverider don't exactly have much American fiction to begin with to conflict with. It is a little jarring to clearly pick out a Japanese speaker saying "Diver" and see subtitles that say "Waverider," though, but I suspect this is a personal problem.
For simplicity's sake I won't be using certain Japanese terminology in these reviews. Cybertrons become Autobots, Destrons become Decepticons, Seibertron becomes Cybertron. As much as this is a reversal of my purity towards stuff like Ginrai and Metalhawk, these are the terms everyone here is familiar with, and more importantly, there's no actual difference between the two terms.
Anyway, enough BSing, and onto the actual episodes. Summaries exist on TFWiki, so I won't be giving a play-by-play of what happens, just noting things that interest me or stand out.
Episode 1: Rise Up!! Pretenders
Aaaaand it begins. The Decepticons make themselves known, the Autobots stop them. We get basic explanations of the Pretenders and how they've been on Earth for ages. I can't remember how much of the specifics are told in this episode, but according to Metalhawk, the Autobot ship containing "the Autobots" crashed onto Earth as a result of a space battle millions of years ago, when "cavemen still ruled." They disguised themsleves as humans and the Decepticons disguised themselves as "demons" to terrorize humans. Apparently they sealed the Decepticons (of which there are three at the beginning--Bomb-Burst, Submarauder and Skullgrin) in different places on Earth. Recently there was a cosmic event and they all escaped, forcing the Autobots to come out of hiding. Pretty basic stuff. Sets the tone for the series. Good start.
Episode 2: Terror! The Decepticons' Manhunt
This episode introduces Cab, a wild boy from some island. I've been calling him Mowgli, because Cab is a dumb name and this is a dumb character. Unfortunately, we're gonna be stuck with him for a long time. He's not really 'that' annoying, mind, and this is a series that revolves almost entirely around the idea of humans becoming Transformers--so I came prepared. Besides, anime has a tendency to make these kind of characters work over the long run.
Shuta's dad dies in a Decepticon attack and they move to a new Autobot base. This is a major thing because it quickly establishes that Characters Can Die in this series. When my girlfriend saw this, she was a little impressed. This episode has a lot more action than the previous. It keeps the momentum going.
Episode 3: Kidnapping!? The Targeted Jumbo Jet
In the last episode, the Decepticons started turning people into zombies using mysterious powers. This is apparently a major plot element, because in this episode, they're trying to find a scientist whose biological experiments would help them control the zombies better. The Autobots investigate, and Shuta and Mowgli befriend a young girl, Minerva, who decides to go to their school and live with them...because the plot demands it.
Obviously the show is moving pieces around so they can be used later, since there's absolutely no reason for Minerva to transfer there. (Also, I keep writing her name as Minverva. So I'm probably just going to call her that.) In Mowgli's intro episode, his grandfather/butler/whatever says he received a letter from the "International School of Japan" inviting him to attend. So he has an excuse. Minverva just up and decides she should go to that school and live in Japan also. Because the team needs a girl.
Episode 4: Birth! Headmaster Jrs
This is where the show starts to get good--or at least, it starts to focus on what the plot is actually going to be about. Metalhawk reveals that Shuta, Mowgli and Minverva are all going to get the famous Masterforce Bracelets and the ability to become Headmasters, with Transtectors and everything. The explanation given is that the Autobots knew the Decepticons (who seem to be just these three dudes and the Seacons, who have shown up periodically across the last few eps) would show up again, and invented a way for humans to help them fight alongside Autobots. So, for as much crap as I give the kids, the Autobots have at least recruited them and made them full-fledged Transformer bodies so they can fight alongside them. Metalhawk says they're only a rescue team for now, though--when they're ready, they can take on Decepticons. Metalhawk received the Transtectors from Chromedome, who makes a cameo appearance and says that the Decepticon war in space is escalating so he doesn't have many resources.
Meanwhile, the Decepticons have recruited a biker gang that I'm going to call Crash And The Boys. "I'm Crash, and these are the Boys." "Is that girl a boy too?" "Yes." (Upon some quick research, it turns out Cancer/Squeezeplay isn't a girl at all. Whoops! Now my joke sucks.)
I guess they used to be in charge of a bosozoku (Japanese motorcycle gang; note, I am not a weeaboo) until some dude who looks like Kuwabara from Yu Yu Hakusho kicked their asses and became the new leader. The Decepticons stole some of Chromedome's shipment of Transtectors which they either rebuilt, or are inexplicably shaped like monsters, and give them to Crash and The Boys. Why? Because the plot demands it. (Early episodes, I'm giving you a pass, and also by this point I was kind of fading out of it. I'm coming down with a cold, can you blame me?)
Anyway, Crash and the Boys take their new Transtectors (who are Fangry, Squeezeplay and Horri-Bull) and start wrecking shit. The Autobots head out and take the kid trio with them, who are doing a rescue mission when Crash and The Boys start beating the crap out of them. And then Metalhawk shows up and they run away.
This is good, though. It's obvious that Crash And The Boys aren't horrible people, and are probably going to have a redeeming arc. But right now, they serve as great foil to the Headmaster Juniours.
Episode 5: Rage!! Little Devils with No Need for Rules
The Juniours head to America to hang out with Waverider who's going to train them to be awesome in their robot suits. Shuta and Mowgli get the hang of this thing pretty quick but Minverva is having issues, because she's a girl and afraid of things. Later, Decepticons attack, and Minverva witnesses Crash and The Boys kill a little girl's puppy, which inspires her to kick some ass. It's a standard tale about Believing In Yourself. We get to see Crash and The Boys kill a dog though! That's fucked up.
And I fell asleep during the next episode. So, there you go, the first five episodes of Masterforce, briefly talked about. Yes, I'm obviously not taking this very seriously, because it's early going on and I have to keep myself entertained while this setup happens. In a few episodes, we get Buster and Hydra and Ginrai, so that's when things will kickstart.
Masterforce is, by far, the most interesting of the "Takara Trilogy" to me. It cleans the slate from Headmasters' ending and from the previous four years of TF cartoon continuity. While Headmasters dealt with all of the hanging threads from the US Season 3 and had the task of introducing all the Headmasters and Targetmasters, Masterforce's clean break makes it really easy for a newcomer to get into the series.
And that clean break is Masterforce's greatest strength and, so far, also its biggest falling. Part of the reason the break works is because Masterforce introduces some very fundamentally different ideas about Transformers--the main characters at the beginning are all Pretenders, and later, human Headmasters. One problem with introducing these kind of characters is that they can sometimes seem overpowered or too far removed from existing characters that they feel out of place, or it's difficult to use them efficiently. By cutting out previous characters, everything begins on a level playing field. The Pretenders don't seem out of place because, at the start of the series, 'all' of the Autobots are Pretenders, and they can all do this.
Unfortunately, it's also a huge drawback to the series, because while longtime fans like myself are ready to go with a new and different interpretation of TF (and have actually been reading about this series for years beforehand!), some casual fans might be turned off because there's no Optimus Prime, no Bumblebee, no Megatron, no Starscream. There's no built-in nostalgia fuel, there's no quick attachment. It's easy to get into Headmasters because the beginning has Optimus Prime and Galvatron and Hot Rod, characters who are familiar to people who've at least seen the American cartoon, or the animated movie. Starting over essentially from scratch means a lot is riding on these initial episodes to make a lasting impression that'll rope in new viewers. (The subtitles don't help, mind you, but hey.) Thankfully for Masterforce, I've been onboard for this series since I first discovered the Optimus Prime toy I had was actually a character named Ginrai in Japan in 2002.
Some more quick brief thoughts: The opening and ending, at least for the early episodes (I don't know if they change them as the show goes on) are just atrocious. Visually, they're not bad, but the songs are just...not good at all. I know that their fare is standard for anime of the 80s, but there are way better 80s anime themes. Why couldn't we have gotten something as good as the Saint Seiya theme, for example? I've resorted to skipping through the intro and ending of each episode.
You also might have heard there was some mild "Americanisation" of the names, and it's true, to a degree. But thankfully, it's not damaging in any way and seems to have been done in the interest of appeasing those who had the toys. Japanese exclusive characters like Ginrai and Metalhawk retain their names--there's no attempt to make Ginrai into "Powermaster Optimus Prime and Hi-Q," for example. On the other hand, more minor characters like Diver and Phoenix have had their names changed to their American versions (in this case, Waverider and Cloudburst). The Autobot Headmaster Juniours retain their Japanese names, probably because they're actually humans, but the Decepticon counterparts don't share the same luxury, so we get humans referred to as Fangry and Squeezeplay. (I'm only a few episodes into this, so I'm not sure if they have separate human names in the subs.) Hydra and Buster retain their Japanese names, probably because those two toys actually differ from their US releases as Dreadwind and Darkwing. I haven't gotten to Overlord's bits yet, but I'm guessing he's called Overlord there, as it should be. Honestly, this doesn't really bother me as much as you'd think it would. The major characters are all called by their proper names, and guys like Landmine and Waverider don't exactly have much American fiction to begin with to conflict with. It is a little jarring to clearly pick out a Japanese speaker saying "Diver" and see subtitles that say "Waverider," though, but I suspect this is a personal problem.
For simplicity's sake I won't be using certain Japanese terminology in these reviews. Cybertrons become Autobots, Destrons become Decepticons, Seibertron becomes Cybertron. As much as this is a reversal of my purity towards stuff like Ginrai and Metalhawk, these are the terms everyone here is familiar with, and more importantly, there's no actual difference between the two terms.
Anyway, enough BSing, and onto the actual episodes. Summaries exist on TFWiki, so I won't be giving a play-by-play of what happens, just noting things that interest me or stand out.
Episode 1: Rise Up!! Pretenders
Aaaaand it begins. The Decepticons make themselves known, the Autobots stop them. We get basic explanations of the Pretenders and how they've been on Earth for ages. I can't remember how much of the specifics are told in this episode, but according to Metalhawk, the Autobot ship containing "the Autobots" crashed onto Earth as a result of a space battle millions of years ago, when "cavemen still ruled." They disguised themsleves as humans and the Decepticons disguised themselves as "demons" to terrorize humans. Apparently they sealed the Decepticons (of which there are three at the beginning--Bomb-Burst, Submarauder and Skullgrin) in different places on Earth. Recently there was a cosmic event and they all escaped, forcing the Autobots to come out of hiding. Pretty basic stuff. Sets the tone for the series. Good start.
Episode 2: Terror! The Decepticons' Manhunt
This episode introduces Cab, a wild boy from some island. I've been calling him Mowgli, because Cab is a dumb name and this is a dumb character. Unfortunately, we're gonna be stuck with him for a long time. He's not really 'that' annoying, mind, and this is a series that revolves almost entirely around the idea of humans becoming Transformers--so I came prepared. Besides, anime has a tendency to make these kind of characters work over the long run.
Shuta's dad dies in a Decepticon attack and they move to a new Autobot base. This is a major thing because it quickly establishes that Characters Can Die in this series. When my girlfriend saw this, she was a little impressed. This episode has a lot more action than the previous. It keeps the momentum going.
Episode 3: Kidnapping!? The Targeted Jumbo Jet
In the last episode, the Decepticons started turning people into zombies using mysterious powers. This is apparently a major plot element, because in this episode, they're trying to find a scientist whose biological experiments would help them control the zombies better. The Autobots investigate, and Shuta and Mowgli befriend a young girl, Minerva, who decides to go to their school and live with them...because the plot demands it.
Obviously the show is moving pieces around so they can be used later, since there's absolutely no reason for Minerva to transfer there. (Also, I keep writing her name as Minverva. So I'm probably just going to call her that.) In Mowgli's intro episode, his grandfather/butler/whatever says he received a letter from the "International School of Japan" inviting him to attend. So he has an excuse. Minverva just up and decides she should go to that school and live in Japan also. Because the team needs a girl.
Episode 4: Birth! Headmaster Jrs
This is where the show starts to get good--or at least, it starts to focus on what the plot is actually going to be about. Metalhawk reveals that Shuta, Mowgli and Minverva are all going to get the famous Masterforce Bracelets and the ability to become Headmasters, with Transtectors and everything. The explanation given is that the Autobots knew the Decepticons (who seem to be just these three dudes and the Seacons, who have shown up periodically across the last few eps) would show up again, and invented a way for humans to help them fight alongside Autobots. So, for as much crap as I give the kids, the Autobots have at least recruited them and made them full-fledged Transformer bodies so they can fight alongside them. Metalhawk says they're only a rescue team for now, though--when they're ready, they can take on Decepticons. Metalhawk received the Transtectors from Chromedome, who makes a cameo appearance and says that the Decepticon war in space is escalating so he doesn't have many resources.
Meanwhile, the Decepticons have recruited a biker gang that I'm going to call Crash And The Boys. "I'm Crash, and these are the Boys." "Is that girl a boy too?" "Yes." (Upon some quick research, it turns out Cancer/Squeezeplay isn't a girl at all. Whoops! Now my joke sucks.)
I guess they used to be in charge of a bosozoku (Japanese motorcycle gang; note, I am not a weeaboo) until some dude who looks like Kuwabara from Yu Yu Hakusho kicked their asses and became the new leader. The Decepticons stole some of Chromedome's shipment of Transtectors which they either rebuilt, or are inexplicably shaped like monsters, and give them to Crash and The Boys. Why? Because the plot demands it. (Early episodes, I'm giving you a pass, and also by this point I was kind of fading out of it. I'm coming down with a cold, can you blame me?)
Anyway, Crash and the Boys take their new Transtectors (who are Fangry, Squeezeplay and Horri-Bull) and start wrecking shit. The Autobots head out and take the kid trio with them, who are doing a rescue mission when Crash and The Boys start beating the crap out of them. And then Metalhawk shows up and they run away.
This is good, though. It's obvious that Crash And The Boys aren't horrible people, and are probably going to have a redeeming arc. But right now, they serve as great foil to the Headmaster Juniours.
Episode 5: Rage!! Little Devils with No Need for Rules
The Juniours head to America to hang out with Waverider who's going to train them to be awesome in their robot suits. Shuta and Mowgli get the hang of this thing pretty quick but Minverva is having issues, because she's a girl and afraid of things. Later, Decepticons attack, and Minverva witnesses Crash and The Boys kill a little girl's puppy, which inspires her to kick some ass. It's a standard tale about Believing In Yourself. We get to see Crash and The Boys kill a dog though! That's fucked up.
And I fell asleep during the next episode. So, there you go, the first five episodes of Masterforce, briefly talked about. Yes, I'm obviously not taking this very seriously, because it's early going on and I have to keep myself entertained while this setup happens. In a few episodes, we get Buster and Hydra and Ginrai, so that's when things will kickstart.